@rasdainsura: ถ้าอยากได้รักดีๆ..ให้ขอพี่ไม่ใช่ขอพร...โอเครมีน😁😁@Lucifer. #BioActivexMeenNicha#BioActive1stAnniversary#มีนนิชคุณ#meennicha8 #creatorsearchinsights

RASDA_DA
RASDA_DA
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Saturday 30 May 2026 13:47:58 GMT
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user98471324819228
วันนา โฮกฮารมย์ :
2026-06-05 03:31:42
0
applekatoon818
86 🐺🐼🌜 applekatoon818 :
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰โอ้ยยน่ารักมากๆๆลูก
2026-05-31 03:48:46
2
user4390413929861
อำพร มะณี :
น่ารัก❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
2026-05-31 14:13:50
0
yupa066
"86...YU" :
โอ้ยยวาสนาใครกันน้ออออออ
2026-05-30 16:06:05
1
puu.mp86
Forever.MP86🌙🐼🌻 :
นึกถึงที่มีนไปขอพรที่ไหว้ด้วยดอกบัวสีชมพูเลยค่ะมี๊🪷🥰
2026-05-30 15:10:32
1
relak28
อารีย์ :
น่ารัก
2026-05-31 09:51:28
0
juniornokcute
86แม่จูเนียร์🦝🐼 :
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
2026-05-30 15:40:32
1
pouna239
Pouna🌻 :
🤣🤣🤣
2026-05-30 18:54:20
1
user5862961130597
ธนันทา :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-05-30 14:28:49
2
lakkhanaphurueang
86ลักขณา🐺❤️🐼area86 :
🥰🥰🥰🥰
2026-05-30 14:22:17
1
aye.phyoe449
Aye Phyoe :
😘😘😘
2026-05-30 14:40:28
1
alexseesouphanh
alexseesouphanh :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-05-31 10:37:24
0
user3650613360675
joleczka :
🥰🥰🥰🥰
2026-05-31 12:41:47
0
user76113488731368
แสงเดือน มูลบัวภา :
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
2026-05-31 09:33:23
0
user1700793681761
user1700793681761 :
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
2026-05-31 11:07:14
0
user3168202427722
นฤภร ศรีอ่อน :
🌸🌸🌸
2026-05-30 13:55:47
0
daw.moe6481
Aung Phyoe Kyaw :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-01 06:52:32
0
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Other Videos

You ever notice how, right after a breakup, you’re the one drowning—but they look fine? They’re out with friends. Posting. Laughing. Living. Meanwhile, you’re trying to figure out how to breathe through the gut punch of losing them. You wonder, How can they move on so fast? Did I mean anything? But here’s something you need to know: there’s this thing called the Delayed Regret Effect. It’s real. And in relationships, it shows up like this: one person feels the loss immediately, and the other feels it… later. Much later. And sometimes, when it finally hits them, it hits harder. In psychology, this is tied to emotional processing styles. Research by Stroebe & Schut (1999) in their Dual Process Model of Coping with Bereavement shows that some people cope through avoidance—they distract, deny, and deflect rather than process. It’s not that they’re okay—it’s that they’re numbing. And numbing looks a lot like peace… until the silence sets in. Until there’s no more distraction. Until they realize they’ve lost someone who actually saw them. And by then? You’ve probably started to heal. See, you didn’t get the luxury of avoidance. You felt it. You sat in the pain. You wrote the journal entries, cried through the playlist, checked your phone, and had to remind yourself not to text them. You were forced to heal in real time. That’s why it hurt so much. But here’s the twist: while you were breaking, you were also rebuilding. Them? They were avoiding the rebuild. So by the time regret kicks in, they’re behind. And that regret often comes when they realize they can’t reach you the way they used to. When your energy feels different. When they feel you moving on, and it doesn’t orbit around them anymore. That’s the delayed regret. It shows up when your growth becomes visible. When you’re glowing again—not because you want them back, but because you’ve come back to yourself. A study by Brumbaugh and Fraley (2015) explored how ex-partners often experience waves of regret after their ex shows resilience or perceived improvement in quality of life. Translation? The better you get, the worse they feel—because they didn’t expect you to thrive without them. So if you’re in that space right now—hurting while they’re laughing—don’t rush to compare timelines. Healing isn’t a race. It’s a reckoning. And some people run from it for as long as they can… until the silence forces them to listen to what they lost. They may come back. They may apologize. They may suddenly realize what they threw away. But by then? You’ll be somewhere they can’t follow. Not out of spite. But because you climbed while they coasted. And when regret finally catches up to them… you won’t be where they left you. #breakup #breakups #breakupwisdom #healing #SelfCare #selfrespect
You ever notice how, right after a breakup, you’re the one drowning—but they look fine? They’re out with friends. Posting. Laughing. Living. Meanwhile, you’re trying to figure out how to breathe through the gut punch of losing them. You wonder, How can they move on so fast? Did I mean anything? But here’s something you need to know: there’s this thing called the Delayed Regret Effect. It’s real. And in relationships, it shows up like this: one person feels the loss immediately, and the other feels it… later. Much later. And sometimes, when it finally hits them, it hits harder. In psychology, this is tied to emotional processing styles. Research by Stroebe & Schut (1999) in their Dual Process Model of Coping with Bereavement shows that some people cope through avoidance—they distract, deny, and deflect rather than process. It’s not that they’re okay—it’s that they’re numbing. And numbing looks a lot like peace… until the silence sets in. Until there’s no more distraction. Until they realize they’ve lost someone who actually saw them. And by then? You’ve probably started to heal. See, you didn’t get the luxury of avoidance. You felt it. You sat in the pain. You wrote the journal entries, cried through the playlist, checked your phone, and had to remind yourself not to text them. You were forced to heal in real time. That’s why it hurt so much. But here’s the twist: while you were breaking, you were also rebuilding. Them? They were avoiding the rebuild. So by the time regret kicks in, they’re behind. And that regret often comes when they realize they can’t reach you the way they used to. When your energy feels different. When they feel you moving on, and it doesn’t orbit around them anymore. That’s the delayed regret. It shows up when your growth becomes visible. When you’re glowing again—not because you want them back, but because you’ve come back to yourself. A study by Brumbaugh and Fraley (2015) explored how ex-partners often experience waves of regret after their ex shows resilience or perceived improvement in quality of life. Translation? The better you get, the worse they feel—because they didn’t expect you to thrive without them. So if you’re in that space right now—hurting while they’re laughing—don’t rush to compare timelines. Healing isn’t a race. It’s a reckoning. And some people run from it for as long as they can… until the silence forces them to listen to what they lost. They may come back. They may apologize. They may suddenly realize what they threw away. But by then? You’ll be somewhere they can’t follow. Not out of spite. But because you climbed while they coasted. And when regret finally catches up to them… you won’t be where they left you. #breakup #breakups #breakupwisdom #healing #SelfCare #selfrespect

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